Rentn.org, it has come to our attention that you are making illegal use of our trademark, "snarky". Our trademark application covers its use in "an arrangement of black and white pixels", and your comment is clearly such an arrangement. We demand that BestNetTech immediately take down your unlicensed used of our intellectual property.
And, to those who are thinking about replying, pointing out their patents on pixels (or the colors black and white, or on the English language), please be advised that we possess significant second-strike capability.
"A COMPANY HAS NO "DUE PROCESS" OBLIGATION TO A CUSTOMER."
Well, then, perhaps we should fix that.
And the ISP's aren't going to randomly generate strikes and send them out. Strikes are based on what is happening with your account.
The allegations leading to the strikes will come from the purported holders of the copyrights. They can allege anything they choose, with no apparent recourse or penalty for false accusation.
"You get accused of something and then you have to defend yourself"
Please provide any evidence that the six-strikes plan uses the justice system in the way that you describe.
"What you're asking for is like being able to choose a different long distance carrier for your landline even if they don't own the copper of that land line to your home"
You mean, like the US has had for the past quarter-century or so?
The patent was filed for on February 14, 2012. It is a follow-on to a provisional patent that was filed for on April 6, 2011.
I have started an Ask Patents "question" to collect relevant prior art, including some cursory analysis of the prior art listed to date in this article and its comments. If anyone knows of possible prior art, please contribute an answer on the Ask Patents entry, so we can aggregate the results. Thanks!
(disclaimer: I am heavily involved in Android application development)
This is unsurprising, and perhaps inevitable, given Google's acquisition of Motorola and going after other patent collections.
In the olden days, simply hoarding patents and hoping for Mutually Assured Destruction competitive models would have sufficed. But Apple (and others) have turned this into a shooting war... one in which few (if any) are actually shooting at Google. Mostly, they are suing non-Motorola Android device manufacturers. IANAL, but I don't see where Google has the opportunity to volunteer as defendant (besides, they'd get sued for stealing the idea from The Hunger Games). It does Google little good to have a pile of patents and not be able to defend the larger Android ecosystem with them.
One could argue that Google's acquisition of Motorola Mobility was simply to ensure that at least one manufacturer couldn't be sued without involving Google, but Android's strength lies in numbers of manufacturers.
I think Google, as is all too common, missed a golden opportunity for controlling the messaging. Had they come out with a "we won't shoot first, but we will shoot last" statement around this move, they could have done a bit better job of claiming the moral high ground (to the extent that there is "moral high ground" in the world of software patents).
In an ideal world, Google would have elected to "turn the other cheek" on all this patent nonsense, and instead worked to get the patents invalidated independently of being sued and pursue other similar tactics. As I often point out to those I'm advising in Android app development, in an ideal world, I'd have hair.
I'm not, any more than the original article did. The original article does not address investors; neither did I. The Kickstarter-esque model they are using is getting seed users, not seed investors.
"It's economically interested in taking its users' money. That's not that much different than a site that's economically interested in taking advertisers' money."
With a paid service, there are effectively two parties: the service and the users. With an ad-supported service, there are effectively three parties: the service, the users, and the advertisers. I agree that the relationship between the service and the users does not necessarily depend upon the model... but there's another party in the ad-sponsored system, and it's interests may not be aligned with the users.
Say, for example, al Qaeda (or Occupy Wall Street, or the Tea Party) decides to set up an account on the service and uses it as part of its propaganda/publicity campaign. Government officials decry the service's allowing al Qaeda's (or Occupy Wall Street's, or the Tea Party's) participation. The service defends allowing the account, on the grounds that the service has no right to discontinue arbitrary accounts for arbitrary reasons in the absence of some court order.
Some users will leave the service due over the issue, and that will harm the service and its remaining users. However, the three-party solution is intrinsically weaker, in that advertisers might withdraw from the service, either on their own or due to government pressure. In that case, the service's interests are aligned with its (remaining) users, but the advertisers' interests are not aligned with the users. By having advertisers, the ability of the service to keep servicing the users' interests is degraded in the face of controversy or similar pressures.
Admittedly, it is possible that some situation would arise that would cause more lost revenue from departing users than from departing advertisers, though in that case, the service's interests are apparently not aligned with enough of its users. However, advertisers, particularly larger ones, are easier to pressure.
Look, it's pretty simple: if you make a product, and people continue to buy less of it, continue to consume less of it, and continue to use less of it as part of their business, then you get to continue to make less money.
You can argue that piracy is the primary cause. Others, like myself, can argue that The Band's modest original popularity and increasing irrelevancy is the primary cause.
For example, you cite "being used by radio stations to attract listeners", which is about as piracy-resistant of a business model as you're going to get. Radio stations aren't going to be downloading tracks from The Band off a torrent somewhere, as they don't need to. Yet, I am willing to be that The Band's royalties from such licensing is on the decline, because The Band is irrelevant to modern rock stations and is competing against an ever-growing collection of artists in the "classic rock" segment, as more artists age and become "classic rock". That's just natural given the passage of time.
Similarly, the sales of CDs, vinyl, etc. for The Band will continue to decline, for much the same reason. Which means if they are not touring (and I have no idea if they are or not, though from other comments my guess is "not"), I fail to see how anyone would expect The Band's income to remain steady, even if there were no piracy.
In fact, given that the percentage of The Band airtime on radio will decline in the face of increasing competition, and given the decline of "record stores" as a means of exposing people to different artists, it seems like pirate sites are a fairly likely place for people to find out about The Band's music, given a lack of other options. Whether the conversion rate of pirates becoming paid buyers of The Band's materials offsets those who avoid buying by downloading pirated The Band tracks is certainly up for debate, but that leads back into CwF/RtB and the general discussion of business models for musicians.
"I buy books from them, but I'd never sell my works through them."
Neither do I. That just means that you have to have other ways of directly reaching your target audience and (gently) promoting your books to them. For example, I accomplish this by answering thousands of Android app development questions per year, releasing open source components, delivering presentations at Meetups and conferences, and so on.
With regards to your laundry list of "costs":
- It takes "time and effort" to do anything, from writing to flipping burgers
- Choose a business model that does not require professional proofreading (e.g., continuously updated books, with rewards to readers who find flaws)
- Digital books do not typically require "professional-looking product masters", and for POD, a word processor and a mid-range edition of Adobe Acrobat will typically suffice
- Don't include many (any?) illustrations that you cannot do yourself
- Server and bandwidth fees will be negligible (Amazon S3 is costing me less than $100/month for several GB of subscriber material)
- Sales transaction fees should run ~3%, if you use the right services
- Sales taxes, in the US, are typically charged on top of your sale price and therefore are not a cost
- You would pay income taxes on any income, whether from writing or from flipping burgers
Aspiring self-publishers should read the works of Aaron Shepard (_POD for Profit_ and _Aiming at Amazon_) to get a better handle on the cost structures involved.
If you can buy or download "approved" apps via google's marketplace intended to violate copyright, then they do have some liability.
He clearly made false statements on those issues, which I have corrected.
The Heartland Institute has a legal write to sue for libel.
They are only concerned with those journalists who made libelous statements about them in relation to the forged document.
Not anyone who "commented" on it - which is absolutely absurd.
It would help if you knew what you were talking about.
An OS that was proven to be non-secured (at least compared to ISO)
with an App store that's non-secured (unlike Apple's App Store)?
it won't down the line if every 50$ tablet gets exploited out of the box
No need to remind anyone that 25% of the Android exploits were found in the android store...
Number of releases isn't an indication of health, only an indication of the ease by which a "movie" can be made at some level.
All of the OEMs get their builds with the specific chipset they purchase for the phone.
Then there is the Google penny for every press of a search hardkey on Android phones.
FYI, "breakage" as a term in retail refers as much to shoplifting as physical destruction of goods. 20% is still preposterous, of course.
The Android Market used to have a 48-hour refund period. They changed that policy to be a 15-minute refund period. The complaints were from developers creating apps whose value might be consumed in that 48-hour window (e.g., games with only a few levels). Hence, technically, Google could require a 7-day refund period, across the board, or perhaps only for app sold in Taiwan (though probably not only Taipei).
Google has no ability to enforce these terms on any other distribution channel, and developers in the Android Market itself have limited ability to offer longer refund periods themselves (per Google's apparent argument).
However, Taipei's 15-day demand means that paid apps will probably be pulled from Taiwan, at least for a while, as these sorts of changes aren't going to be implemented quite that quickly.
Re:
Citation, please.